(Originally when excavated, this was
numbered as Reg. II, Insula 10).
NdS 1939 records:
A group of
14 skeletons were found outside of the first doorway on the east side. (p.216)
[See II.7.1].
A group of 17 victims were found on the west side of the pool. (p.215) [See
II.7.3].
A group of 18 victims were found gathered in the latrine (p.222) [See II.7.11].
A group of 4 victims were found along the west portico (p.226) [See II.7.8].
Apart from these “groups of victims”, other individual victims were also found here.
For Maiuri’s
“Scavo della “Grande Palestra” nel quartiere dell’Anfiteatro", -
see Notizie
degli Scavi, Anno 1939, Fascicoli 7, 8, 9, on pages 165-238.
For details of
Della Corte’s “Le iscrizioni della “Grande Palestra” ad occidente dell’
Anfiteatro”. See Notizie degli Scavi, 1939, (p.239-327)
II.7.1 Pompeii, on left. Palaestra. July 2021. Looking north along the exterior east wall.
Foto
Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021. Looking west to entrance doorway.
Foto
Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2018. Looking west to
entrance doorway. Photo courtesy of Aude Durand.
II.7.1 Pompeii.
Palaestra. December 1936. Gruppo di 14 scheletri. Group of 14 skeletons.
Secondo NdS; Poco
al di fuori della prima porta del lato orientale della Palestra, quasi a pied
della scarpata dell’aggere, si mise in luce (dicembre 1936) un gruppo di 14
scheletri dei quali 6 caduti uno sull’altro in uno spazio assai ristretto di
terreno, in un viluppo confuso di ossa, e i rimanenti un poco discosti più a
nord, giacenti sul primo strato di cenere, quasi tutti caduti bocconi sul
terreno (fig. 28); di uno solo di essi (un giovanetto) potè eseguirsi un calco
parziale del tronco, trovandosi gli arti inferiori ancora infossati nel
lapillo. La presenza di individui adulti e giovanili, e la tragica
sovrapposizione dei corpi, fa supporre che ci troviamo innanzi non a gruppi di
fuggiaschi fortuitamente riuniti dal terrore della comune sciagura, ma di
persone più intimamente strette da vincoli di parentela e probabilmente di due
distinti gruppi di famiglie fuggite assieme da abitazioni contigue.
According to NdS; Just outside the first door on the eastern
side of the Palestra, almost at the foot of the escarpment of the embankment, a
group of 14 skeletons came to light (December 1936), 6 of which had fallen one
on top of the other in a very small area of ground, in a confused tangle of
bones, and the remainder a little further to the north, lying on the first
layer of ash, almost all of which had fallen flat on the ground (fig. 28). Of
only one of them (a juvenile) was it possible to make a partial cast of the
trunk, as its lower limbs were still buried in the lapillus. The presence of adult and juvenile individuals, and the tragic
superimposition of the bodies, suggests that we were facing not groups of
fugitives fortuitously reunited by the terror of the common calamity, but of
people more intimately close by ties of kinship and probably of two distinct
groups of families who fled
together from neighbouring homes.
Vedi/See Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1939, p.
216, fig. 28.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. May 2012. Detail of entrance. Photo courtesy of Buzz Ferebee.
II.7.1 Pompeii.
Palaestra. May 2010. Entrance.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra.
December 2006. Entrance.
According to Garcia y Garcia,
Many bombs, at least 10, fell in the internal and external areas, damaging the palaestra excavated between 1935-39.
The first bombs fell during the night incursion of 20th September 1943; the others fell during the following days between 21st to the 26th September 1943.
One of the most beautiful of the plaster-casts made was of a man covering his face with his hands in a manner of true abandonment and resignation.
He was found at the eastern extremity of the southern
portico of the Palestra, and shown by Maiuri in the Pompeii Antiquarium,
replaced in 1947 by a restoration that had altered notably the original form. (P.195 and note 78).
See Garcia y
Garcia, L., 2006. Danni di guerra a Pompei. Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. June 2012. Latrine building south of entrance at II.7.1.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2006. Walled-up entrance to latrine building to south of II.7.1.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra.
Plaster cast of victim found near the latrine, perhaps found crouching on the ground with his back against the wall at the east end of the south portico.
Now in VII.7.29 Forum granary market.
Other victims found along the south portico (p.225) –
Skeleton of a horse and its driver.
The skeleton of the horse had been found almost leaning against the portico wall; his legs folded on the ground, his body a little contracted but still reassured in its anatomical composure; his head rested on the ash bank. Found less than a metre from the animal's head, was the skeleton of the person to whom the horse belonged. Extraordinary detail: eleven beads of glass-paste were collected around the bones of the beast's neck; a necklace as it is still used today in Campania as part of the decoration of the animal.
Found towards the eastern extremity from the southern portico, and from which plaster-casts could be made because they both lay in the high layer of ash.
The one was a beautiful young man's body with agile legs knocked down on the portico floor at the first fall of the ashes.
The other, the most tragically posed, was found leaning
against the wall, kneeling, crouching on the ground, in that crouching position
that is found in Neolithic tombs, with his head folded forward, bent almost
between his knees, for the better protection of himself with his hands and
cloak against the exhalation of asphyxiating gases. He had shoes on his feet
and wore the typical cloak of the peasant, the “cuculla”, whose flaps he held tight
against his mouth. And in removing the
ash under his knees, imprints of overlapping fabrics were noticed, as if the
unfortunate man had found comfort in his tragic pose by shielding his knees
with the few garments he could arrange. (p.225-6).
(ALTRE VITTIME.
— Delle altre poche vittime che si rinvennero lungo il portico meridionale,
sono da tener presente:
No. 66-67.
Scheletro di un cavallo e del suo conducente.
Lo scheletro
del cavallo si è rinvenuto quasi addossato al muro del portico: le gambe
ripiegate sul terreno, il corpo un po’ rattratto ma raccolto ancora nella sua
compostezza anatomica; il capo poggiato sul banco di cenere. A meno di un metro
dalla testa dell’animale si rinvenne lo scheletro della persona a cui il
cavallo apparteneva. Particolare importante: intorno alle ossa del collo della
bestia si raccolsero undici grani di pasta vitrea; facevano parte della
decorazione dell'animale, così come si usa ancor oggi in Campania di ornare con
collane di grani variopinti non solo le testiere ma anche il collo dei cavalli
da tiro e da corsa.
No. 61-62. Si
rinvennero verso l’estremità orientale dall'ambulacro meridionale e se ne potè
eseguire il calco perchè giacenti l’uno e l’altro nello strato alto di cenere.
L’uno era un
bel corpo di giovinetto con le gambe agili e asciutte, stramazzato sul
pavimento del portico al primo cadere delle ceneri.
L’altro il più
tragicamente atteggiato; si rinvenne addossato al muro, ginocchioni, accosciato
sul terreno, in quella positura di rannicchiamento che si ritrova nei sepolcri
neolitici, con la testa ripiegata in avanti, curvata quasi fra le ginocchia,
per meglio proteggersi con le mani e con il mantello dall’esalazione dei gas
asfissianti. Aveva calzari ai piedi e portava il tipico mantello dei villici, la cuculla, i cui lembi egli teneva
compressi alla bocca. E nel rimuovere la cenere sotto le ginocchia si notarono
impronte di tessuti sovrapposti, come se lo sventurato avesse cercato un po’ di
ristoro in quella sua tragica positura fulcendo le ginocchia con i pochi
indumenti di cui poteva disporre. (p.225-6).)
For Maiuri’s
“Scavo della “Grande Palestra” nel quartiere dell’Anfiteatro, - see Notizie
degli Scavi, Anno 1939, Fascicoli 7, 8, 9, on pages 165-238
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. September 2015. On display as an exhibit in the Summer 2015 exhibition in the amphitheatre.
“After the excavation of the Quadriporticus of the Theatres, between 1935 and 1939 the largest number of victims was found in this area, almost 100 bodies, 65 of which were found in the pumice layer and the rest in the debris left by the final 2 surges (4 and 5) that hit the city………
Only two casts have been successfully taken from all the bodies found in the Palestra:
one of an adult (see fig 3 on page 146 of this book, and also photo above) and the other:
according to Maiuri “the handsome body of a young man, one of those strong, agile young men from Campania, with athletic legs just made for running and for the last gasp of the race”. The victim had been identified as an athlete, also because of the discovery near his body of bronze strigils, usually used by gymnasts”
See Guzzo, P. (ed), (2003). Tales from an eruption. Milano, Electa. (p.143, article by Tiziana Rocco, and (p.144) for photos of items found–
Gold and silver armband in form of a snake,
Bronze surgical instruments,
Different sized bronze cases with lids, for medicaments, SAP 6127, 6129a-e
Silver cup covered with foil embossed with scenes of the cult of Isis, NAP 6044.
Plaster cast of figure found near the latrine, crouching on the ground with his back against the wall of the east portico.)
II.7.1 Pompeii. May
2018.
Plaster-cast of victim found near the latrine of the Palaestra, perhaps, as portrayed here, found crouching on the ground with his back against the wall of the east end of the south portico. Photo courtesy of Buzz Ferebee.
However, when this body was cast, he was found to be tipped forwards, huddled up and bent double on his knees, when restored he was placed in this position.
See Stefani, G. (2010). The Casts, exhibition at Boscoreale Antiquarium, 2010. (p.10).
II.7.1/II.7.11 Pompeii. “La forica della
Palestra”. Looking east along south side
towards the amphitheatre.
See Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1939,
p. 191, fig.16.
II.7.1 Pompeii. September 2015.
Looking west from entrance along south wall. The door on the left is the entrance to the latrine.
According to Maiuri –
“The waste-water from the swimming pool was used for washing the large latrine on the south side of the southern portico.”
See Notizie
degli Scavi, 1939, (p.189)
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2006. Looking west along south portico.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. October 2022. Looking north-west from entrance doorway and south portico. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. November 2024. Looking north-west from south portico. Photo courtesy of Annette Haug.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. September 2015. Looking north-west from entrance doorway and south portico.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2006. Looking north-west through south portico.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021. Detail of column.
Foto Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. Looking west along south side.
Photographed 1970-79 by Günther Einhorn, picture courtesy of his son Ralf Einhorn.
II.7.1 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. October 2023. Looking north along interior
east side. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021. Looking north along interior east side.
Foto Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. October 2023. Looking north-east along interior east side. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021. Looking north-east along interior east side.
Foto Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2018. Looking north along the exterior east wall. Photo courtesy of Aude Durand.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. May 2010. Looking north along the exterior east wall.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. May 2010. East wall between II.7.1 and II.7.2.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2006. Wall from II.7.1 to II.7.2.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. March 2009. Looking west from top of the amphitheatre.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. June 2012. Looking towards the south side.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. November 2024.
Looking from north-east towards south-west corner, and pool. Photo courtesy of Annette Haug.
II.7 Pompeii. November 2024.
Looking towards west
side from south portico. Photo courtesy of Annette Haug.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021. Looking towards interior west side.
Foto
Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. June 2019. Looking north towards II.7.9, on right,
along west side. Photo courtesy of Buzz Ferebee.
II.7.1 Pompeii. November 2024. Looking north along interior west side. Photo courtesy of Annette Haug.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. October 2023. Looking north along interior
west side. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021. Looking north along interior west side.
Foto Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. September 2015. Looking north along the interior west side.
II.7.1 Pompeii. April 2019.
Looking north across Palaestra towards Vesuvius, in distance
behind trees. Photo courtesy of
Rick Bauer.
II.7.1 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north-east, from south-west corner. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. July 2021.
Looking east towards plaster-casts of tree-roots, and entrances at II.7.5, II.7.4 and II.7.3, in centre, and II.7.2, on right behind tree.
Foto Annette Haug, ERC Grant 681269 DÉCOR.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. December 2018.
Looking towards north-east corner, with Amphitheatre on right.
Photo courtesy of Aude Durand.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. April 2018. Looking north-east
from south-west corner. Photo courtesy of Ian Lycett-King.
Use is subject to Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License v.4 International.
II.7.1 Pompeii. Palaestra. September 2015. Looking north-east from south-west corner.